Huge new house in historic neighborhood will have to shrink or go, state supreme court rules

A dispute among neighbors in the historic McKennan Park district has reached the South Dakota Supreme Court.
Wochit

The homes of the Sapienza and McDowell families are shown June 27, 2016, in Sioux Falls, S.D. The McDowells won a lawsuit, upheld in the South Dakota Supreme Court, that would require the newer house to conform to neighborhood standards.(Photo11: Joe Ahlquist, (Sioux Falls, S.D.) Argus Leader)

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — Owners of a house that towers over others in a historic neighborhood must match their dwelling to the historical standards of the neighborhood, the state's high court ordered in a unanimous ruling Thursday.

The house’s owners, Joseph and Sarah Sapienza, sparked the ire of their neighbors in historic McKennan Park here as they began building the more than 4,000-square-foot home in spring and summer 2014. It replaced a more modest dwelling built in the mid-1920s.

Pierce and Barbara McDowell, who owned the home that fell in the shadow of their next-door neighbor, filed suit in 2015 against the Sapienzas and the city of Sioux Falls, whose Board of Historic Preservation approved the building permit.

"They would have to redesign their house, retool it, reconstruct it and get it approved by the historical board," Steve Johnson, lawyer for the McDowells, said about the consequences of the ruling for the Sapienzas. "Or the home could be removed, which obviously seems like the only reasonable alternative."

The Sapienzas bought an older house on the same lot in September 2013 for $300,000. In November 2016, the most recent information available, their new house was assessed for tax purposes at more than $700,000, and the Sapienzas were paying almost $14,000 to Minnehaha County in property taxes.

The Sapienzas appealed to the state's highest court after Judge John Pekas of Second Circuit Court determined in a civil suit that their house violated rules for newly built homes in the McKennan Park neighborhood.

“My client wanted the house made compliant or removed.”

Steve Johnson, Sioux Falls, S.D.

Its height is almost 12 feet taller than the average height of the historic houses in the neighborhood and more than 8 feet taller that what was permitted for new construction, according to court records. The Sapienzas' house is listed as having three split levels plus a basement in property records; the McDowells' house has 1½ stories plus a basement.

"My client wanted the house made compliant or removed," Johnson said.

The South Dakota Supreme Court decision may be an inspiration to homeowners who have steamed privately about new humongous houses in their older neighborhoods. But it applies only to one state.

Before the Sapienzas' house was built, the McDowells asked their soon-to-be neighbors to place the driveway between the two houses but were told that would violate the rules of feng shui.

“According to feng shui, you get a lot of negative energy from the north,” Josh Sapienza said during the original trial in June 2016.

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Also during that trial, Johnson presented one witness, Lisa Nykamp of Sioux Falls, who said she and her husband had planned to buy the McDowells' home for $950,000 and $975,000, negotiating over what items would convey with the house.

They were looking to close the deal while the Sapienzas' new home was being built but backed out when Nykamp visited the McDowell home on a sunny day and found it in the shadow of the Sapienza house. She also was able to touch the scaffolding being used on the Sapienza home from the McDowells' property.

Perhaps the last straw for the McDowells was learning from a fire inspector that they could no longer use a wood-burning fireplace original to the house because it was within 10 feet of the Sapienza residence. The McDowells' home and the entire McKennan Park neighborhood has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1984.

Johnson believes that the state Supreme Court's decision will stretch beyond the McKennan Park house, affecting how contractors approach projects in historic districts across South Dakota.

"It will be a guidepost for contractors," the lawyer said. "It will be a guidepost for architects, it will be a guidepost for the city and it will be a guidepost for homeowners.”

McKennan Park home owners Josh and Sarah Sapienza sort through documents while architect Spencer Ruff talks to the Sioux Falls Board of Historic Preservation about how their home does not comply with national historic standards Wednesday, May 9, at Carnegie Town Hall in Sioux Falls. Briana Sanchez / Argus Leader

Pierce McDowell, center, listens to Lawyer Steve Johnson explain the issues Pierce and his wife Barbara have with the neighboring McKennan Park home that does not comply with national historic standards during a meeting with the Sioux Falls Board of Historic Preservation Wednesday, May 9, at Carnegie Town Hall in Sioux Falls. Briana Sanchez / Argus Leader